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All Cigar Discussion>PG vs PEG
Jasonw560 04:06 PM 07-26-2011
I've been trying to get some PG for my tupperdor without having to spend 20 bucks at Tractor Supply on a gallon of the stuff, just to throw most of it out.

I just off the phone with a pharmacist, who told me PG and PEG (polyethylene glycol) are the same thing.

Any chemists (or chemistry buffs) here who can give me a definitive answer? I've looked at wikipedia, and used my google-fu, and all I see is that they're chemically similar.

So, should I go get some MiraLax and mix that with my distilled water? Or try to find a smaller amount of PG? My spidey sense is tingling on this one.
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Cornrow_Wallis 04:12 PM 07-26-2011
Just use distilled water. :-)
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Jasonw560 04:25 PM 07-26-2011
Yeah, I think that may be best. Using it with some wet flower foam right now. Holding humidity at 63-64%.
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DPD6030 04:47 PM 07-26-2011
careful as flower foam will mold Jason. :-)
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markem 06:08 PM 07-26-2011
Originally Posted by DPD6030:
careful as flower foam will mold Jason. :-)
:-) flower foam should be viewed with caution. It's probably okay for a couple months, but I'd try to have an alternative ready by then. Been there, paid that price.
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Cornrow_Wallis 06:14 PM 07-26-2011
How big is the humi? Boveda packets are really hard to beat if it's a desktop type rig. About as cheap and easy as it comes.

http://www.bovedapacks.com/catalog.aspx?catid=1
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SeanGAR 06:31 PM 07-26-2011
Propylene glycol and polyethylene glycol are absolutely not the same thing.

Propylene glycol is 3 carbons long with 2 hydroxyl groups, weighing 76 g/mole.

Polyethylene glycol is a polymer of variable lengths and molecular weights.

Polyethylene glycol 200 weighs ~200 g/mole and is liquid at room temperature while polyethylene glycol 20,000 is ~20,000 g/mole and is a white solid at room temperature. They differ in how many ethylene glycol molecules are in the polymer. Miralax is polyethylene glycol 3350, weighing (you guessed it) 3350 g/mole.

PEGs are different from ethylene glycol, which is the poisonous component of antifreeze (PEGs are ethylene glycol polymers).

You want propylene glycol if you're mixing for humidity control, but I prefer and recommend beads.

Bovedas are OK ... they use saturated salt solutions to control humidity the way we use saturated sodium chloride to test hygrometers (at 20-25 C, NaCl --> 75% humidity, NaBr --> 58-59% humidity). I forget what salts Boveda uses.
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poker 06:38 PM 07-26-2011
They seem simular according the the MSDS for both, but there are differences.

Polyethylene glycol 400 MSDS
http://www.sciencelab.com/msds.php?msdsId=9926620
Chemical Formula: H(OCH2CH2)nOH

Propylene glycol MSDS
http://www.sciencelab.com/msds.php?msdsId=9927239
Chemical Formula: CH3CHOHCH2OH
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SeanGAR 06:51 PM 07-26-2011
The reason propylene glycol reduces humidity is because the water vapor pressure (that controls humidity) is related to the mole fraction of water in a liquid mixture.

So you COULD use a low molecular weight PEG to control humidity, as long as it was soluble in water. Since you are changing the partial vapor pressure of water by decreasing its mole fraction, a large molecular weight compound such as PEG 3350 would be much less effective than propylene glycol (you'd need more PEG 3350 in a water mix than propylene glycol).

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vapor_pressure

You could even use ethanol to control humidity, but you'd be facing problems because ethanol is volatile. Propylene glycol has low volatility and thus useful in decreasing water vapor pressure and humidity when mixed with water.
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Jasonw560 09:29 PM 07-26-2011
I have plenty of floral foam. I can change it out every coule of months.

I should have an alternative in a couple of months. I think beads will be my best long-term solution.

I have a 2.5 gal. rubbermaid container, sided with spanish cedar sheets, my flower foam humidifier, and my hygro.
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Tyler 10:10 PM 07-26-2011
Originally Posted by Jasonw560:
I have plenty of floral foam. I can change it out every coule of months.

I should have an alternative in a couple of months. I think beads will be my best long-term solution.

I have a 2.5 gal. rubbermaid container, sided with spanish cedar sheets, my flower foam humidifier, and my hygro.
Sounds like a pretty good setup if you can get some beads. I could be wrong but I think that you could get the beads for around $20 for that sized space. You might start researching. I think Heartfelt Industries has some great beads at a great price. Just my two cents though.
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Jasonw560 05:02 AM 07-27-2011
Originally Posted by Wallbright:
Sounds like a pretty good setup if you can get some beads. I could be wrong but I think that you could get the beads for around $20 for that sized space. You might start researching. I think Heartfelt Industries has some great beads at a great price. Just my two cents though.
Thanks. I've read good thngs about Heartfelt here and other forums, so I will start researchng.
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jjirons69 06:18 AM 07-27-2011
Fault the same battles, Jason. Save yourself a lot of time, money, and worry.

One word - beads.

Get more than you need and follow the instructions. Carefree humidity controls.
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Tyler 07:16 AM 07-27-2011
Jamie is very wise. :-)
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BTcigars 01:12 PM 07-27-2011
Also, give kitty litter a try. Its a less expensive alternative.
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T.G 01:47 PM 07-27-2011
:-)
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357 01:48 PM 07-27-2011
I have a gallon of 50/50 (PG/distilled water) I'll send you if you just cover shipping. It's about 95% full.
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Jasonw560 01:57 PM 07-27-2011
Shipping might be more than the $10 I would spend at Tractor Supply.

I'm gong to get the beads. After payday.
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T.G 02:29 PM 07-27-2011
Originally Posted by Jasonw560:
I'm gong to get the beads. After payday.
Wise decision. :-)
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BTcigars 02:55 PM 07-27-2011
Originally Posted by T.G:
:-)
haha dont laugh at me! my kitty litter holds at a steady 68% :-)
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